Small town marketing secret: Have something to invite people to
People need a compelling reason to leave their homes and come experience your business with you. This feels like a very heavy lift.

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Youโre supposed to be exciting enough to pull people away from their phones, their families and the comfort of online shopping. Youโre competing with everything else demanding their attention.
Hereโs the big secret: You donโt have to create all that energy yourself.
Piggyback on Whatโs Already Happening
Your community probably already has regular events that pull people out of their homes.
Art walks. First Fridays. Girls night out shopping events. Farmers markets. Chamber mixers.
People are already planning to attend these, or thinking about it. Some are already coming downtown or to your area.
Your job is to give them one more reason to show up.

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What Doesnโt Work:ย Just staying open during the community event
No experience. No transformation. Justโฆ open, like you are every other day.
Thatโs not enough.
What Does Work: Make a Thing out of it
You have to create something special that happens during that regular community event. Here are ideas:
- Demos โ Product demos, technique demonstrations, how-to sessions
- Mini services โ super quick fashion nails, or 5 minute financial boost
- Meet the experts โ A real estate agent hosting โmeet the lenders.โ A feed store bringing in a vet for cattle health Q&A during the farmers market.
- Workshops or mini-classes โ Quick skill-building sessions people can actually use. Sounds like a lot for a shopping day, so keep it light and quick.
- Make and take projects โ People love leaving with something they created
- Trunk shows or special collection reveals โ Show merchandise you donโt normally carry
- Live entertainment โ Music, performances, even personal star chart readings (yes, really โ Gen Z is into astrology and all that)
- Tasting or sampling events โ Let people experience your products
- Q&A sessions or โask me anythingโ โ Be available for real questions
- Behind-the-scenes tours โ Show them what they donโt normally see (people love back room tours)
- Out of town big names โ Bring in expertise people want to hear from
Pick one. Make it yours. Do a fresh edition of it every time that community event happens.
You become the tipping point
Someone was thinking about coming to art walk. Then they heard youโre doing that demo theyโve been curious about. Now theyโre definitely coming.
Youโre not competing for attention. Youโre adding value to something people already plan to attend. Or at least thought about attending.
And hereโs your new go-to move: When anyone expresses interest in your business but never seems to make it in person? Donโt just โfollow up.โ Invite them to your special thing during the next community event.
โHey, Iโm doing a live demo during First Friday โ would love to see you there!โ
You still have to do your regular marketing like mailing postcards, sharing photos, but youโre supercharging it with a deadline. And then youโre layering it with repeated messages.
โOur demo was packed! Weโre doing another (a little different) next month!โ

The Small Town Reality: Fewer people, less turnout
Yes, rural areas have fewer people. That means fewer potential attendees. Less momentum each time. Itโs harder to keep events going on your own.
Thatโs exactly why piggybacking on existing events is brilliant for small towns. The event is already happening. People are already considering attending. Youโre just giving them one more reason to come.
Start Small, Keep Going
- Pick one existing community event.
- Create one simple thing to offer during that event.
- Commit to showing up consistently with your thing every single time.
Thatโs it. Thatโs the whole strategy.
You donโt need elaborate planning or big budgets. You need one good reason for people to experience your business, timed to when theyโre already planning to be out.
The Opportunity: Most businesses arenโt doing this.
Some businesses might stay open during community events. But most are not creating experiences.
You will stand out.
When youโre the business that always has something interesting happening during art walk, or First Friday, or girls night out โ people start planning around you. You become part of why they attend the community event in the first place.
So whatโs your thing? And which community event will you tie it to?